| Yes but batteries contain toxic materials and rare earth minerals, require lots of energy to make, lots of energy to recycle, etc... So energy to mine the materials, energy to assemble the battery, energy to recycle the battery after it's useful lifespan (5-10 years)... None of these are ever counted in people's calculations. I tried to find data on energy required to produce the batteries and they still didn't count the mining cost. I'd wager that hydrogen is more energy efficient over the entire lifespan of a vehicle. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/jun/14/electr... Lithium mining is expensive and you need to move a lot of dirt to get a little lithium... 100 billion tons of waste and never mind the waste aspect, it takes a lot of energy to move a ton of dirt. |
Recycling li-ion is currently a booming business because it requires much less energy than processing raw ores - see Redwood Materials for more info.
Everyone takes these calculations into account because batteries come under intense scrutiny from people with ulterior motives.